2. Michigan (1992)

Duke 71, Michigan 51

Wolverines' Three-Point Shooting: 1/11 (9.1 Percent)

For all of the hype and hoopla over the Fab Five, they certainly weren't fabulous on this night. In the 1992 National Championship Game against Duke, the Wolverines only made one three-point shot as the Blue Devils blew them off the court 71-51.

9.1 Percent...Wow!

Jimmy King was the only Michigan player to connect on a three-pointer over the course of the forty-minute game. Jalen Rose, Chris Webber and Juwan Howard went a combined zero-for-six from beyond the arc.

1. Duke (1990)

Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images

UNLV 103, Duke 73

Blue Devils Three-Point Shooting: 1-for-11 (9.1 Percent)

The most lop-sided National Championship Game pitted UNLV vs. Duke in 1990 in Denver.

The final score reflected the only time where a team has scored 100 points and represented the largest winning margin (30). UNLV's backcourt of Anderson Hunt and Greg Anthony punished Duke with high-pressured perimeter defense.